N α -Methylation of arginine: Implications for cell-penetrating peptides.
Lindsey O CalabrettaJinyi YangRonald T RainesPublished in: Journal of peptide science : an official publication of the European Peptide Society (2022)
The field of cell-penetrating peptides is dominated by the use of oligomers of arginine residues. Octanol-water partitioning in the presence of an anionic lipid is a validated proxy for cell-penetrative efficacy. Here, we add one, two, or three N-methyl groups to Ac-Arg-NH 2 and examine the effects on octanol-water partitioning. In the absence of an anionic lipid, none of these arginine derivatives can be detected in the octanol layer. In the presence of sodium dodecanoate, however, increasing N-methylation correlates with increasing partitioning into octanol, which is predictive of higher cell-penetrative ability. We then evaluated fully N α -methylated oligoarginine peptides and observed an increase in their cellular penetration compared with canonical oligoarginine peptides in some contexts. These findings indicate that a simple modification, N α -methylation, can enhance the performance of cell-penetrating peptides.